Brookston Beer Bulletin

Jay R. Brooks on Beer

  • Home
  • About
  • Editorial
  • Birthdays
  • Art & Beer

Socialize

  • Dribbble
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • GitHub
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Powered by Genesis

You are here: Home / Birthdays / Historic Beer Birthday: F.D. Radeke

Historic Beer Birthday: F.D. Radeke

October 3, 2024 By Jay Brooks

radeke
Today is the birthday of Frederick D. Radeke (October 3, 1843-September 24, 1901). He was born in Oyle, Hanover, Germany, but came to America when he was 24, in 1867, settling in Kankakee, Illinois. He initially became a grocer, but when it burned down, he joined his brother-in-law in the brewery business he’d bought, and by 1873 it had been reorganized as the F. D. Radeke Brewing Co. It was closed by prohibition, reopened under a series of names after repeal, but closed for good in 1937.

Frederick-D-Radeke-portrait

This obituary is from “The Kankakee Daily-Journal,” dated November 29, 2016.

Frederick Radeke moved to Kankakee in 1867. The previous year his sister, Margaret Radeke Beckman and her husband, Fredrick, bought the Riverside Brewery. Radeke quickly became involved in the local business community.

Within a year, he had purchased a grocery store on Court Street, opened a billiards parlor and set up a bottling works to produce ginger ale and carbonated water. Shortly after fire destroyed both his store and billiards parlor in 1870, Radeke joined Beckman in the brewery operation. In 1873, the Riverside Brewery was reorganized and renamed as the F.D. Radeke Brewing Company.

During the first two decades of the 20th century, the brewery was highly successful. In the year 1913, for example, a workforce of 125 people produced 40,000 barrels of beer, and the bottling department filled and capped 30,000 bottles per day. Radeke brewed bottles of beer with names such as Wiener Export and Royal Pale. F.D. Radeke Brewing Company advertised itself as “Brewers and Bottlers of High Grades of Beer.”

On Jan. 1, 1920, brewing of Radeke beer came to a halt because of the Volstead Act. After Prohibition the brewery reverted from root beer back to regular beer, but never recovered from the years of Prohibition and eventually closed in 1936.

Radeke-postcard

And here’s another obituary, this one from the American Brewers’ Review:

Radeke-obit
Radeke-brewery-workers
F.D. Radeke Brewing Co. workers.

This history of the brewery is from “100 Years of Brewing.”

Radeke-100yrs-1
Radeke-bock
Radeke-100yrs-2
Radeke-beer-label

FD-Radeke-Brewery-1883

Filed Under: Birthdays, Breweries, Just For Fun Tagged With: Germany, History, Illinois



Find Something

Northern California Breweries

Please consider purchasing my latest book, California Breweries North, available from Amazon, or ask for it at your local bookstore.

Recent Comments

  • Return of the Session – Beer Search Party on The Sessions
  • Scoats on Beer Birthday: Scoats
  • You're Not From Around Here - Food GPS on The Sessions
  • Mark Smith on Beer In Ads #4778: Rheingold Can Quench A Dragon’s Thirst
  • Getting Ready to Celebrate St Patrick’s Day – The Blessing of Beer | Red Panda News on Beer Saints

Recent Posts

  • Beer Birthday: Dave Alexander May 8, 2025
  • Historic Beer Birthday: Emil Christian Hansen May 8, 2025
  • Beer In Ads #4962: Rieker’s Bock Beer May 7, 2025
  • Historic Beer Birthday: Anton Dreher May 7, 2025
  • Beer In Ads #4961: Santa Cruz Bock Beer May 6, 2025

BBB Archives

Go to mobile version